In the last blog I wrote that the Eiffel tower was a monument that embodied the yuvutu code. There is however another famous monument in Paris which owes it origins to the yuvutu sect: the Vendome column in Place Vendome.
The accepted history of the column is that Napoleon had it erected in 1810 to celebrate his victory at the Battle of Austerlitz and that the column is modelled on Trajan's Column in Rome. The lesser known true story behind the column is that it was Josephine, Napoleon's wife, who first suggested to him to erect a column in place vendome, just down the road from her favourite shopping arcade Les Tuilleries. She wanted to pay homage to her yuvutu lifestyle.
Josephine had many lovers and often took part in group sex. She was angry with Napolean for his wanting her to change her lifestyle so she plotted a secondary use for her yuvutu project: to immortalise Napoleon's cuckolding by planting a statue of Napoleon at the very top of the massive penis statue (her lover's penis). Josephine's secret revenge must have felt sweet especially as the column was finally erected in 1810 at around the same time as her divorce with Napoleon.
Given her lifestyle, Josephine was definitely a yuvutu secret society member and so was her main lover Hippolyte Charles a dashing French Hussar officer. Although Hippolyte Charles had indirectly a pivotal role in European history, not much is known about him. In the latter part of his life he mysteriously became very wealthy and was able to buy two large estates. I believe that his newly acquired wealth was a result of obtaining Inca treasure from another yuvutu society member, San Martin, a South American independence fighter he met in Spain in 1808 during the Peninsular war. By selling the treasure to wealthy aristocrats and merchants in France, Italy and England, Hippolyte was able to help San Martin finance his military campaigns in Argentina and Peru whilst no doubt taking a cut for himself.
The Vendome column is similar in proportion to Inca phallic statues and monuments. Eiffel no doubt knew that the Vendome Column was a yuvutu symbol, because the Eiffel tower lies in the direct straight line path between the column and Cuzco, Peru, the capital of the Incas.